Monday, January 07, 2013

Why Joe Biden Has Become The Most Influential Vice President In History (Sorry, But Dick Cheney Doesn't Count)

When Barack Hussein Obama takes the presidential oath of office on January 21, at his side will be Joseph Robinette Biden, without question the most influential vice president for good in American history. This by way of differentiating him, as if one needs to, from Richard Bruce Cheney, without question the most influential vice president for evil in American history.

Perhaps one reason Biden's star has risen so high is because he succeeded Cheney, who acted as a de facto president when it suited his imperial self, usurped the roles of national security adviser and secretary of state, was a tireless cheerleader for the use of torture and fear mongering, a scold in accusing anyone who didn't agree with him as being unpatriotic, a key player in going to war against Iraq, and a man who brooked no dissent. Ever.

By contrast, Biden's chops as a conciliator, honed through 36 years in the Senate, has thrust him into the spotlight at key junctures since Obama was elected, most recently in breaking the fiscal cliff logjam. Additionally, and perhaps most importantly as history will show, Biden has played a special role as Obama's devil's advocate with the encouragement of a president nearly two decades his junior.

Biden has spoken up when he believed Obama was not making the correct decision, notably in being the sole holdout among the president's inner circle in opposing the daring raid that took out Osama bin Laden, and as the harshest skeptic of the president's Afghanistan strategy, so harsh that some Pentagon bigs labeled him a traitor behind his back. As history will also show, Obama got lucky with Bin Laden and Biden was right regarding Afghanistan.

There are those who will tell you that Biden was destined for greatness, but I would not be one of them.I met the future vice president when I was 12 and on my way to junior high school, and he
was 17 and entering his senior year at a Roman Catholic boy's school. He was a gangly kid with no apparent social
skills and had a stutter. We played beach volleyball together at the
Delaware shore for a couple of summers, and his folks and my folks became
friends. Delaware, you see, is even smaller than it looks on a map.

Biden
went on to the University of Delaware, where he excelled at political
science in a department later chaired by the late Jim Soles, who was to
attract the future managers of both the 2008 Obama and McCain
campaigns to Delaware as undergrads. I followed Joe to Delaware where
I excelled at nothing except getting in trouble with the university administration as editor of
the student newspaper.

Although I sort of kept up with Biden
through my parents' friendship with his, our paths didn't cross again
until 1972, my second election as a voter, when I pulled the lever
for a Joe who had long left behind the traits of awkward adolescence.

Biden upset a longtime Republican U.S. senator, but within days of the
election suffered the tragic deaths of his wife and baby daughter in a traffic accident. (Years later, he had his own brush with mortality after suffering a potentially fatal brain aneurysm.) Persuaded by Senate Majority Leader Mike
Mansfield to not quit, he began the first
of six terms in Washington -- at 29 the youngest senator in modern history -- and a tenure in the upper chamber that was to be characterized by hard work, growing foreign
relations expertise, a willingness to conciliate, which is to say compromise, and a successful hair
weave, as well as a tendency to shoot from the lip.

As my friend Mark Bowden wrote in an Atlantic essay, Biden is in some respects the antithesis of the president he serves.

"No one believes Obama would want, need, or tolerate a Rasputin across
the [West Wing] lobby," Bowden wrote. "But whether it has been managing the tricky drawdown of
American involvement in Iraq, or implementing the $787 billion Recovery
Act, or soothing worries in Eastern Europe over Obama’s revised
missile-defense strategy, or helping select two Supreme Court nominees,
Biden seems the opposite of a pain in the ass. He has made himself
indispensable."

Biden's indispensability was on offer during the many meetings on how to take out Osama bin Laden. Defense Secretary Robert Gates, like the vice president, also opposed an air or ground operation, but later went along with the high-risk ground mission that Obama advocated.

"Mr.
President, my suggestion is: don’t go," Biden said during one Situation Room meeting. "We have to do . . . more
things to see if he's [at a compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan]." Biden believed that if the raid
failed, Obama could say good-bye to a second term.

Like vice presidents in general, Biden has been subjected to ridicule.

Beyond his verbal blunders, there was The Awl's liveblog (with the sound off) of the Biden-Ryan vice president debate and a hilarious series of articles and images in The Onion to which Biden has reacted to with good humor and then some. A consequence is that these send-ups have burnished his image as a Joe Sixpack. (For the record, Biden does not drink alcohol.)

"Look, I ran for
president [in 2008]," Biden told Bowden, "because I honest-to-God believed that for
the moment, given the cast of characters and the problems of the
country, I thought I was clearly the best-equipped to lead the country . . .
But here's what I underestimated: I had two elements that I focused on,
which made me decide to run. One was American foreign policy, and the
other was the middle class and what's happening to them economically. If
Hillary were elected or I were elected, and assume I did as good a job
as I could possibly get done, it would have taken me four years to do
what [Obama] did in four weeks, in terms of changing the perception of
the world about the United States of America. Literally. It was
overnight. It wasn’t about him. It was about the American people . . . It
said, these guys really do mean what they say. All that stuff about the
Constitution, and all about equality, I guess it's right."

The biggest reason for Biden's success is revealed in that reflection on 2008: As in the Senate, he has made his own political fortunes secondary and those of the president and country he serves first and foremost.

It is scary how much power he has. This gun control Committee he is in charge of, it is amazing how quickly they were formed. The NRA was recently quoted as saying that when they met with the committee that is was not a meeting in which they would be heard. There was an agenda and that agenda was executed.

About Me

Shaun Mullen was born to blog. It just took a few years for the medium to catch up to the messenger. Over a long career with newspapers, this award-winning editor and reporter covered the Vietnam War, O.J. Simpson trials, Clinton impeachment circus and coming of Osama bin Laden, among many other big stories. Mullen was a five-time Pulitzer Prize nominee and has covered 12 presidential campaigns. He is the author of "The Bottom of the Fox: A True Story of Love, Devotion & Cold-Blooded Murder" (2010) and "There's A House In The Land: A Tale of the 1970s" (2014). Both books are available for sale online in trade paperback and Kindle editions. Much of Mullen's work is archived and can be accessed online in the Shaun D. Mullen Journalism Papers in Special Collections at the University of Delaware Library.